Cheapest electricity tariff UK with no exit fee

Find no-exit-fee electricity tariffs available for your home, compare whole-of-market options, and understand what “cheap” really means for your meter, region and payment type.

  • Compare estimated unit rates and standing charges for your postcode
  • Filter for tariffs that allow you to leave without an exit fee
  • Clear caveats on fixed vs variable deals, smart meters, and payment methods

Estimates depend on your region, meter type and usage. Availability and terms vary by supplier and tariff.

Fast answer: what’s the cheapest no-exit-fee electricity tariff?

There isn’t one universal “cheapest” no-exit-fee electricity tariff in the UK. The lowest-cost option for you depends on your region (Distribution Network Operator area), meter type (standard credit, smart, prepayment, Economy 7), payment method (Direct Debit vs pay-on-receipt) and your annual usage.

Most no-exit-fee tariffs are variable. Fixed tariffs often come with exit fees (or waive fees only in a limited switching window). Always check the tariff’s T&Cs before you start a switch.

What to look for

  • No exit fee (confirm £0 for electricity)
  • Low standing charge for your region
  • Competitive unit rate for your usage band

When “cheap” can be misleading

  • Very low unit rate but high standing charge
  • Prices that can change (variable)
  • Eligibility requirements (smart meter, online-only)

Best next step

Run a postcode quote and compare totals over a year (not just headline rates).

Use the form below to see no-exit-fee options for your meter and payment method.

Compare no-exit-fee electricity tariffs (whole of market)

Tell us your postcode and contact details to receive an estimated comparison. We’ll show tariffs that allow you to leave without an exit fee where available, and we’ll flag key terms (fixed/variable, payment method, meter requirements).

Tip: If you’re on a fixed deal now, check whether your current supplier would charge an exit fee for leaving early. Some suppliers waive fees in the final 49 days of your fixed term.

How no-exit-fee switching works

  1. We match your postcode to your electricity region and available tariffs.
  2. We compare estimated annual costs using your meter/payment preferences.
  3. You choose a tariff. If it’s labelled no-exit-fee, it should be £0 to leave (always confirm on the tariff facts/T&Cs).
  4. The new supplier handles the switch. Your supply stays on throughout.

If your home has a prepayment meter or Economy 7, the cheapest no-exit-fee option can differ significantly. Make sure you compare like-for-like on meter type.

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Compare your options: no exit fee vs fixed vs tracker

No-exit-fee tariffs are often chosen for flexibility. But the “cheapest” option depends on how long you plan to stay put and how comfortable you are with price changes.

Tariff type Exit fee Price certainty Where it can be cheapest Watch-outs
Variable (often no exit fee) Usually £0 Low Short stays, waiting for better fixes, renters Rates can change; “cheap today” may not stay cheap
Fixed Often applies High If priced well and you’ll keep it for the full term Early exit can cost; check end date and fee amount
Tracker / indexed Varies Medium When wholesale prices fall (not guaranteed) Can rise quickly; understand index + update frequency

Quick decision checklist

A no-exit-fee electricity tariff may suit you if:
  • You might move home soon (or you’re renting)
  • You want flexibility to switch again if prices drop
  • You prefer avoiding early termination charges
It may not suit you if:
  • You need strong budget certainty month-to-month
  • You’ve found a competitively priced fixed deal and plan to stay put
  • You can’t meet eligibility (e.g. Direct Debit, online account)

What to check on the tariff facts

  • Exit fees: £0 for electricity (and whether gas differs if dual fuel)
  • Rates by payment method: Direct Debit vs cash/cheque vs prepay
  • Meter compatibility: Economy 7, smart, prepayment
  • Discounts: whether they’re time-limited
  • Price change rules: how and when variable prices can change

Costs, exclusions and common pitfalls (UK-specific)

No-exit-fee doesn’t automatically mean lowest cost. These are the areas most likely to change which tariff is genuinely cheapest for your home.

1) Standing charge vs unit rate trade-off

If you use relatively little electricity, a tariff with a lower standing charge can beat one with a slightly lower unit rate. If you use a lot, the unit rate matters more.

2) Region matters (a lot)

Electricity prices vary across Great Britain by network region. Two households on the same tariff name can see different standing charges and unit rates depending on postcode.

3) Payment method eligibility

Some of the cheapest tariffs assume monthly Direct Debit and online account management. Paying on receipt of bill can cost more.

4) Meter type exclusions

Economy 7 and prepayment tariffs have different rate structures. A “cheap” single-rate tariff may not be available or may not be cheapest for multi-rate users.

Important: If you’re currently in a fixed tariff, you may still be charged an exit fee by your current supplier even if the new tariff has no exit fee. Always check your existing contract end date and exit fee terms before switching.

Two realistic scenarios (with numbers)

These examples show why the “cheapest” tariff depends on usage and standing charge. Figures are illustrative estimates only and exclude VAT assumptions differences; actual rates vary by supplier and region.

Scenario A: low usage flat

Assumptions: 1,800 kWh/year. Tariff 1 (no exit fee) = 26p/kWh + 60p/day. Tariff 2 (no exit fee) = 28p/kWh + 45p/day.

  • Tariff 1 estimated annual: (1,800×£0.26) + (365×£0.60) = £468 + £219 = £687
  • Tariff 2 estimated annual: (1,800×£0.28) + (365×£0.45) = £504 + £164 = £668

Despite a higher unit rate, Tariff 2 is cheaper due to the lower standing charge.

Scenario B: higher usage family home

Assumptions: 4,200 kWh/year. Same tariffs as above.

  • Tariff 1 estimated annual: (4,200×£0.26) + (365×£0.60) = £1,092 + £219 = £1,311
  • Tariff 2 estimated annual: (4,200×£0.28) + (365×£0.45) = £1,176 + £164 = £1,340

Here Tariff 1 is cheaper: at higher usage, the lower unit rate outweighs the higher standing charge.

Practical takeaway

To find the cheapest no-exit-fee tariff for you, compare the estimated annual total (unit rate × usage + standing charge) rather than picking the lowest headline unit rate.

If you don’t know your annual kWh, use a recent bill or your online account history, or estimate based on your home size and heating type.

FAQs: cheapest electricity tariffs with no exit fee (UK)

Are no-exit-fee electricity tariffs always variable?

Often, yes. Many variable tariffs have no exit fee because there’s no fixed end date. Some fixed tariffs may have £0 exit fees, but it’s less common and may come with other conditions.

Can my current supplier charge an exit fee even if my new tariff has none?

Yes. Exit fees are part of your current contract. The new tariff’s “no exit fee” only applies to leaving that new tariff later. Check your current tariff end date and exit fee terms before switching.

Will I lose supply if I switch electricity?

No. In Great Britain, switching supplier shouldn’t interrupt your electricity supply. The network remains the same; only the billing supplier changes.

Do no-exit-fee tariffs exist for prepayment meters?

Sometimes, but availability can be narrower and prices differ from credit meters. If you have prepay, compare using the correct meter type and check whether a tariff requires a smart meter in prepayment mode.

What if I have Economy 7?

Economy 7 has separate day and night rates. The cheapest tariff depends on how much electricity you use at night (often for storage heating or overnight charging). Always compare with an Economy 7/multi-rate profile, not a single-rate assumption.

Do I need a smart meter to access the cheapest no-exit-fee tariff?

Not always. Some online or smart tariffs require a smart meter (or offer extra features if you have one). If you don’t have a smart meter, you can still compare standard credit tariffs and see what’s available in your area.

How do I tell if a tariff truly has no exit fee?

Check the tariff information label or terms for “termination fee” / “exit fee”. Look for £0 and confirm whether it applies to electricity only or both fuels on dual-fuel tariffs.

Is the Standard Variable Tariff (SVT) the same as a no-exit-fee tariff?

SVTs typically have no exit fees, but they aren’t always the cheapest. The SVT is often a default option. A different variable tariff may offer better rates, depending on the supplier and your region.

Trust, transparency and how we assess “cheapest”

Reviewed by: Energy Specialist

Last updated: April 2026

Our methodology (plain English)

  • Primary metric: estimated annual electricity cost = (unit rate × annual kWh) + (standing charge × 365).
  • No exit fee filter: we look for tariffs where the supplier states the electricity exit/termination fee is £0. (If it’s dual fuel, gas may differ.)
  • Regional pricing: we account for postcode-based regional rates where tariff pricing varies by electricity distribution region.
  • Meter/payment assumptions: comparisons are most accurate when you confirm meter type (credit, prepay, Economy 7) and payment method (e.g. monthly Direct Debit).
  • What we don’t do: we don’t assume a tariff is “best” purely on unit rate; we also avoid implying a tariff will remain the cheapest if prices change (especially for variable/tracker deals).

Limitations: Tariffs can be withdrawn or repriced quickly. Some deals are available only to certain customers (e.g. online-only, smart meter required, specific payment method). Your final price is confirmed by the supplier during application.

Helpful UK sources

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Updated on 21 Apr 2026